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All is not well in Seattle on the eve of Seahawks training camp after former Hawks’ fullback Michael Robinson told NFL Network that start running back Marshawn Lynch would hold out as he angles for a new contract.

According to former teammate Michael Robinson, Marshawn Lynch will hold out of Seahawks training camp starting Friday. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

“Marshawn Lynch just called me, we just talked,” Robinson said on NFL Network’s “Inside Training Camp” Thursday afternoon. “He said he will be holding out from training camp this year with the Seahawks.”

Lynch, 28, had threatened to sit out the team’s mandatory minicamp in June as he campaigned to renegotiate his deal and secure more up-front money. Lynch did show up for the three-day minicamp, but did not participate in any drills.

Lynch will be entering the third year of a four-year, $31 million contract he signed in March 2012, earning a base salary of $5 million in 2014 with a $500,000 roster bonus and a prorated signing bonus of $1.5 million. In 2015, the final year of the deal, he’s set to earn $5.5 million in base salary with a $2 million roster bonus and the $1.5 million prorated signing bonus.

According to Pro Football Talk’s Mike Florio, Lynch stands to lose $50,000 for every day of camp he misses after the first five days and will likely forfeit part of his bonus with the holdout.

“Beast Mode” has been a major part of the Seahawks offense since he was acquired from Buffalo via trade four games into the 2010 season. In three full seasons with Seattle, he’s led the NFL with 1,002 regular-season and playoff carries, totaling 4,517 rushing yards and 41 touchdowns.

Robinson, who has not signed with an NFL team after playing out his Seahawks contract last season, often acted as a mouthpiece for the media-shy Lynch. He talked about Lynch’s contract situation with reporters last month.

“He knows he has a short window left,” Robinson, 31, said of Lynch at the time. “Nobody says anything when teams cut a guy at this juncture, though. So, I’m all in for players getting their dollars, man, because you have a short life.”

Whether Seahawks GM John Schneider and head coach Pete Carroll share that sentiment — at least in Lynch’s case — we will soon find out. With between $8-8.5 million in salary cap space according to estimates, the Hawks could conceivably renegotiate Lynch’s deal to give him more money up front. But Schneider and Carroll are likely loathe to reward a player for holding out, fearing the precedent that may set for the rest of the team.

The 6-foot-4, 240-pound Dixon signed with Seattle as an undrafted rookie free agent in May, while Smith was Seattle’s second of three seventh-round draft choices (No. 241 overall) in the 2013 NFL Draft. He split last season between the team’s practice squad and injured reserve.

Presley, a former blue-chip tight end recruit out of Carson, California, participated in Seattle’s rookie minicamp in May. After initially committing to Carroll’s USC program, Presley began his career at UCLA before a string of off-the-field incidents led him to transfer to Division II California University (Pa.) for his final two seasons of college football.

With these transactions and Sidney Rice’s retirement, Seattle currently has 88 players on its roster heading into the first day of training camp on Friday.